Pope Julius II

Pope
Julius II

Papacy began 1 November 1503
Papacy ended 21 February 1513
Predecessor Pius III
Successor Leo X
Orders
Ordination 1471
Consecration 1481
by Sixtus IV
Created Cardinal 15 December 1471
by Sixtus IV
Personal details
Birth name Giuliano della Rovere
Born (1443-12-05)5 December 1443
Albisola, Republic of Genoa
Died 21 February 1513(1513-02-21) (aged 69)
Rome, Papal States
Parents Rafaello della Rovere and Theodora Manerola
Children Felice della Rovere
Previous post Archbishop of Avignon (1474–1503)
Cardinal-bishop of Sabina (1479–1483)
Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals (1479)
Cardinal-bishop of Ostia (1483–1503)
Other popes named Julius
Papal styles of
Pope Julius II
Reference style His Holiness
Spoken style Your Holiness
Religious style Holy Father
Posthumous style None

Pope Julius II (Latin: Iulius II; 5 December 1443 – 21 February 1513), nicknamed "The Fearsome Pope"[1] and "The Warrior Pope",[2] born Giuliano della Rovere, was Pope from 1 November 1503 to his death in 1513. His papacy was marked by an active foreign policy, ambitious building projects, and patronage for the arts—he commissioned the destruction and rebuilding of St. Peter's Basilica, plus Michelangelo's decoration of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. In addition to an active military policy, he personally led troops into battle on at least two occasions.

Early life

There is disagreement about Julius's year of birth, for some sources put it as late as 1453.[3] Giuliano della Rovere was the son of Rafaello della Rovere.[4][5][6][7][8][9] Francesco della Rovere (later Pope Sixtus IV) was his uncle.[10]

He was educated among the Franciscans by his uncle, who took him under his special charge and later sent him to a Franciscan friary in Perugia with the purpose of obtaining knowledge of the sciences.[11] As Belford-Clarke's piratised Americanized [version of] Encyclopædia Britannica (1890) states, "He does not appear to have joined the order of St. Francis, but to have remained one of the secular clergy until his elevation in 1471 to be bishop of Carpentras [in France], shortly after his uncle succeeded to the papal chair."[12]

Cardinalate

Giuliano della Rovere (left, future Julius II), and Julius II's future cardinal-nephew, Clemente della Rovere (right), who safeguarded Giuliano's affairs while he fled to France following a dispute with Alexander VI.
Giulliano della Rovere, as cardinal (left), with uncle and patron Francesco della Rovere, Pope Sixtus IV (right).

After his uncle was elected Pope Sixtus IV, (as Belford-Clarke states) della Rovere "was promoted to be cardinal, taking the same title as that formerly held by his uncle, [Cardinal of] St. Peter ad Vincula. With his uncle [as Pope] he obtained very great influence, and in addition to the archbishopric of Avignon he held no fewer than eight bishoprics,"[12] including Lausanne from 1472, and Coutances from 1476.[13] In June 1474, della Rovere led an army to Todi and Spoleto, and the Città di Castello.[4]

Belford-Clarke, and Kellogg, Baynes & Smith, continue, "In the capacity of papal legate [della Rovere] was sent in 1480 to France, where he remained four years,"[12][14] and "acquitted himself with such ability that he soon acquired a paramount influence in the college of cardinals, an influence which rather increased than diminished during the pontificate of Pope Innocent VIII."[14] Around this time, in 1483, an illegitimate daughter was born, Felice della Rovere.[15]

Kellogg, Baynes & Smith, continue, a "rivalry had, however, gradually grown up between [della Rovere] and [then-Cardinal] Rodrigo Borgia, and on the death of Innocent VIII in 1492 Borgia by means of a secret agreement [and simony] with Ascanio Sforza succeeded in being elected by a large majority, under the name of Pope Alexander VI."[14] Della Rovere, jealous and angry, accused Borgia of being elected over him.[16]

Kellogg, Baynes & Smith, then note that "[d]ella Rovere at once determined to take refuge [from Borgia's wrath] at Ostia, and in a few months afterwards went to Paris, where he incited Charles VIII to undertake the conquest of Naples."[14] In 1494 he joined Charles VIII of France who was undertaking a military expedition into Italy.[4] Charles soon conquered Naples.[17]

Kellogg, Baynes & Smith continue: "Accompanying the young king on his military campaign, [della Rovere] entered Rome along with him, and endeavoured to instigate the convocation of a council to inquire into the conduct of the pontiff with a view to [deposing him], but Alexander, having gained a friend in Charles VIII's minister [Guillaume] Briçonnet, by the offer of a cardinal's hat, succeeded in counterworking [defeating] the machinations of his enemy [della Rovere]."[14]

Belford-Clarke notes that on "the death of [Pope] Alexander VI in 1503 [where his son, Cesare Borgia, fell ill at the same time] Della Rovere supported the candidature of Cardinal Piccolomini of Milan, who was consecrated under the name of Pope Pius III [on 8 October 1503], …then suffering from an incurable malady, of which he died in little more than a month afterward."[12]

Election

As Belford-Clarke describes it, "Della Rovere then succeeded by dexterous diplomacy in winning the support of Cesare Borgia, [who he tricked by his "promise of money and continued papal backing for Borgia policies in the Romagna,"[18]] and was elected to the papal dignity [as Pope Julius II] by the unanimous vote of the cardinals."[12] This was, in Adrew Greeley's view, almost certainly by means of bribery with money,[19] but also, per Ott, Ullman, and Hughes, with promises.[20] [21] [4] Indeed, his election only took a few hours, and the only two votes he did not receive were his own and the one of Georges d'Amboise, supposedly his main opponent and the favourite of the French monarchy.[22]

Papacy

Giuliano Della Rovere thenceforth took the name of his fourth century predecessor, Julius I, and was pope for nine years, from 1503 to 1513.

From the beginning, Julius II set out to defeat the various powers that challenged his temporal authority; in a series of complicated stratagems he first succeeded in rendering it impossible for the Borgias to retain their power over the Papal States. Indeed, on the day of his election, he declared

"I will not live in the same rooms as the Borgias lived. He [Alexander VI] desecrated the Holy Church as none before. He usurped the papal power by the devil's aid, and I forbid under the pain of excommunication anyone to speak or think of Borgia again. His name and memory must be forgotten. It must be crossed out of every document and memorial. His reign must be obliterated. All paintings made of the Borgias or for them must be covered over with black crepe. All the tombs of the Borgias must be opened and their bodies sent back to where they belong—to Spain."[23]

The Borgias' apartments remained sealed until the 19th Century.[23]

Julius II then used his influence to reconcile the two powerful Roman families of Orsini and Colonna, and, by decrees made in their interest, he also attached to himself the remainder of the Roman nobility.

Being thus secure in Rome and the surrounding country, he next set himself to oust the Republic of Venice from Faenza, Rimini, and the other towns and fortresses of Italy which it occupied after the death of Pope Alexander.[4][24] In 1504, finding it impossible to succeed with the Doge of Venice by remonstrance, he brought about a union of the conflicting interests of France and the Holy Roman Empire, and sacrificed temporarily to some extent the independence of Italy to conclude with them an offensive and defensive alliance against Venice.[25][26] The combination was, however, at first little more than nominal, and was not immediately effective in compelling the Venetians to deliver up more than a few unimportant places in the Romagna.[4] With a campaign in 1506, he personally led an army to Perugia and Bologna, freeing them from their despots (Giampolo Baglioni and Giovanni II Bentivoglio, respectively).[4]

In December 1503, Julius issued a dispensation allowing Henry VIII of England to marry Catherine of Aragon; Catherine had previously been briefly married to Henry's brother Prince Arthur, who had died, but maintained that she had remained a virgin for the six months of the marriage. (Some twenty years later, when Henry was in love with Anne Boleyn, he would seek to have his marriage annulled, claiming that the dispensation should never have been issued.) The refusal of Pope Clement VII to grant the annulment led to the English Reformation.

His Ea quae pro bono pacis of January 24, 1506, confirmed papal approval of the mare clausum policy being pursued by Spain and Portugal amid their explorations, and approved the changes of the 1494 Treaty of Tordesillas to previous papal bulls. The same year, he founded the Swiss Guard to provide a constant corps of soldiers to protect the Pope.

As part of the Renaissance programme of reestablishing the glory of antiquity for the Christian capital, Rome, Julius II took considerable effort to present himself as a sort of emperor-pope, capable of leading a Latin-Christian empire. On Palm Sunday, 1507, "Julius II entered Rome . . . both as a second Julius Caesar, heir to the majesty of Rome's imperial glory, and in the likeness of Christ, whose vicar the pope was, and who in that capacity governed the universal Roman Church."[27] Julius, who modelled himself after his namesake Caesar, would personally lead his army across the Italian peninsula under the imperial war-cry, "Drive out the barbarians."[28] Yet, despite the imperial rhetoric, the campaigns of Julius were highly local.

League of Cambrai and Holy League

Leonardo Grosso della Rovere, the fourth cardinal-nephew of Julius II accompanied him on his military campaigns in Bologna and Perugia, and served as his ambassador to France

In 1508, events so favoured the plans of Julius that he was able to form the League of Cambrai with Louis XII, King of France, Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor, and Ferdinand II, King of Aragon. The League fought against the Republic of Venice during the "War of the Holy League" (also known as the "War of the League of Cambrai"). Among other things, Julius wanted the Venetian possession of Romagna; Emperor Maximilian I wanted Friuli and Veneto; Louis XII wanted Cremona; and Ferdinand II wanted the Apulian ports.[29][24] This war was a conflict in what was collectively known as the "Italian Wars".

In the spring of 1509, the Republic of Venice was placed under an interdict by Julius,[30] and later in 1509 Julius sent troops to fight against the Venetians who had occupied parts of the Romagna.[4] During the "War of the Holy League" and the "Italian Wars", alliances and participants changed dramatically; for example, in 1510 Venice and France switched places, and by 1513, Venice had joined France.

Sisto Gara della Rovere, the fifth and final cardinal-nephew of Julius II was the Prior in Rome of the Knights Hospitaller of Malta

The achievements of the League soon outstripped the primary intention of Julius. In one single battle, the Battle of Agnadello on 14 May 1509, the dominion of Venice in Italy was practically lost. But, as neither the King of France nor the Holy Roman Emperor were satisfied with merely effecting the purposes of the Pope, the latter found it necessary to enter into an arrangement with the Venetians to defend himself from those who immediately before had been his allies. The Venetians, on making humble submission, were absolved at the beginning of 1510, and shortly afterward France was placed under papal interdict. Attempts to cause a rupture between France and England proved unsuccessful; on the other hand, at a synod convened by Louis at Tours in September 1510, the French bishops withdrew from papal obedience, and resolved, with Emperor Maximilian's co-operation, to seek the deposition of the pope. After this, in 1510 Julius II personally led his army to Bologna and Mirandola against French troops.[4] In November 1511, a council of French bishops met to seek the deposition of Charles II at Pisa.

Julius thereupon entered into the Holy League of 1511: he allied with Ferdinand II of Aragon and the Venetians against France. In short time, both Henry VIII, King of England (1509–47), and Maximilian I also joined the Holy League of 1511.

Julius hired Swiss mercenaries to fight against the French in Milan in May 1512.[31][25] Julius also convened a general council (that afterward was known as the Fifth Council of the Lateran) to be held at Rome in 1512, which, according to an oath taken on his election, he had bound himself to summon, but which had been delayed, he affirmed, because of the occupation of Italy by his enemies.

During his last months of life, he engaged in negotiations with Ferdinand's diplomats, who obtained from him the ideological back-up necessary for Ferdinand II of Aragon's invasion of Navarre in the form of papal bulls.

Death

In 1512 the French were driven across the Alps, but it was at the cost of the occupation of Italy by the other powers, and Julius, though he had securely established the papal authority in the states immediately around Rome, was practically as far as ever from realizing his dream of an independent Italian kingdom when he died of fever in February 1513.

It is a common error that many associate the burial place of Julius as being in San Pietro in Vincoli as the location for the so-called "Tomb of Julius" by Michelangelo. However, this tomb was not completed until 1545 and represents a much abbreviated version of the planned original, which was initially intended for the new St. Peter's Basilica. Instead, as was always intended, Julius was buried in St. Peter's in the Vatican.

His remains, along with those of his uncle, Pope Sixtus IV, were later desecrated during the Sack of Rome in 1527. Today, the remains of both lie in St. Peter's in the floor in front of the monument to Pope Clement X. A simple marble tombstone marks the site.

He was succeeded by Pope Leo X.

Legacy

Coat of arms of Julius II in the Sistine Chapel.

Patronage of the arts

Despite Julius II's political and bellicose achievements, his chief title to honor is to be found in his patronage of art and literature.[32] He did much to improve and beautify the city. In 1506 he laid the foundation stone of the new St. Peter's Basilica. However, he also demolished the old St. Peter's Basilica, which had stood for more than 1,100 years. He was a friend and patron of Bramante and Raphael, and a patron of Michelangelo. Several of Michelangelo's greatest works (including the painting of the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel) were commissioned by Julius.

Character

Appearance

Julius II is usually depicted with a beard, after his appearance in the celebrated portrait by Raphael. However, the pope only wore his beard from 27 June 1511 to March 1512, as a sign of mourning at the loss of the city of Bologna by the Papal States. He was nevertheless the first pope since antiquity to wear a beard, a practice otherwise forbidden by canon law since the 13th century. Julius shaved his beard again before his death, and his immediate successors were clean-shaven; however, Pope Clement VII again adopted the beard as a sign of mourning after the 1527 sack of Rome. Thenceforward, all popes were bearded until the death of Pope Innocent XII in 1700.

Julius II's illegitimate daughter, Felice della Rovere (in black), on the left of the altar, at the top of the steps, portrayed by Raphael in The Mass at Bolsena

Personal relationships and sexuality

Julius was not the first pope to have fathered children before being elevated to high office, and is believed to have had a daughter born to Lucrezia Normanni in 1483 - after he had been made a cardinal. Felice della Rovere survived into adulthood. Pompeo Litta[33] mistakenly ascribed Felice's two daughters, Giulia and Clarice, to him as well. Shortly after Felice was born, Julius arranged for Lucrezia to marry Bernardino de Cupis. Bernardino was the chamberlain of Julius's cousin, Cardinal Girolamo Basso della Rovere.[34]

Despite an illegitimate daughter (and at least one mistress), it was also suggested that Julius may have had homosexual lovers - although there is no evidence that he was sexually active as pope. His confrontational style inevitably created enemies and sodomy was the "common currency of insult and innuendo".[35] Such accusations were made to discredit him, but perhaps in doing so accusers were attacking a perceived weak point. The Venetians — who were opposed to the pope's new military policy - were among the most vocal; most notably the diarist Girolamo Priuli,[36] and the historian Marino Sanudo.[37] Erasmus also implied sexual misconduct in his 1514 dialogue "Julius Excluded from Heaven"; a theme picked up in the denunciation made at the conciliabulum of Pisa.[38] Criticism was furthermore made of the sinister influence exerted by his advisor, Francesco Alidosi, who Julius had made a cardinal in 1505. However, it is likely that the closeness was down to the fact that he simply knew how to handle him well.[35][39] This sexual reputation survived Julius, and the accusation continued to be made without reservation by Protestant opponents in their polemics against "papism" and Catholic decadence. The French writer Philippe de Mornay (1549-1623) accused all Italians of being sodomites, but added specifically: "This horror is ascribed to good Julius."[40]

Depiction

See also

References

  1. Blech, Benjamin; Doliner, Roy. (2008). The Sistene Secrets. New York, NY: HarperCollins Publishers. p. 106. ISBN 978-0-06-146904-6.
  2. Jokinen, Anniina (15 Mar 2003). "Pope Julius II". Luminarium. Retrieved 7 October 2013.
  3. Cheney, David M. "Pope Julius II (Giuliano della Rovere)". Catholic-Hierarchy. Retrieved 2013-10-07.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Ott, Michael (1910). "Pope Julius II". The Catholic Encyclopedia 8. New York, NY: Robert Appleton Co. Retrieved 15 April 2016. Born on 5 December 1443, at Albissola near Savona; crowned on 28 November 1503; died at Rome, in the night of 20–21 February 1513. He was born of a probably noble but impoverished family, his father being Raffaelo della Rovere and his mother Theodora Manerola, a lady of Greek extraction… / To ensure his success he made great promises to the cardinals, and did not hesitate to employ bribery.
  5. Taylor, Robert Emmett (1980). No royal road: Luca Pacioli and his times. Ayer Publishing. p. 105. ISBN 0-405-13549-1. Giuliano was born on 5 December 1443, at Albizzola, near Savona, the son of Raffaelo, a brother of Sixtus rv, and of Theodora Manerola, a lady of Greek extraction.
  6. Cronin, Vincent (1969). The flowering of the Renaissance. Dutton. p. 33. OCLC 32545. his father, Raffaello della Rovere, being a brother of Sixtus IV, his mother, Teodora Manerola, of Greek origin.
  7. Roterodamus, Erasmus (1986). Collected works of Erasmus. University of Toronto Press. p. 496. ISBN 0-8020-5602-4. His (Julius II) mother was a Greek named Theodora Manerola
  8. Symonds, John Addington (1925). The life of Michelangelo Buonarroti: based on studies in the archives of the Buonarroti family at Florence. Macmillan. p. 383. OCLC 27216292. TEODORA, dr. of Giovanni Manirolo, of Greek origin
  9. Fusero, Clemente (1965). Giulio II. Dall'Oglio. p. 53. OCLC 8809014. Giulio Il virtuoso Raffaello della Rovere ha sposato una donna di origine greca: Teodora di Giovanni Manirola.
  10. Kühner, Hans (2013). "Julius II". Encyclopædia Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica Inc. Retrieved 7 October 2013. Giuliano was the son of the impoverished Rafaello della Rovere, Pope Sixtus IV's only brother.
  11. Paul F. Grendler, ed., Encyclopedia of the Renaissance: Galen-Lyon (Renaissance Society of America, 1999), p. 361
  12. 1 2 3 4 5 Belford-Clarke Co. (1890). "Julius II". Americanized Encyclopædia Britannica: A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and Literature, to Which is Added Biographies of Living Subjects, 96 Color Maps and Numerous Illustrations. Vol. VI.—HIR—LIB. (Revised and Amended ed.). Chicago, IL: Belford-Clarke. p. 3680. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  13. Williams, George L., Papal Genealogy, McFarland, 2004, ISBN 9780786420711
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 Kellogg, Otis Day; Baynes, Spencer & Smith, W. Robertson, Eds. (1898). "Julius II". The Encyclopædia Britannica, Latest Edition, A Dictionary of Arts, Sciences and General Literature… with New American Supplement XIII. New York, NY: The Werner Company. p. 771. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
  15. Caroline P. Murphy, The Pope’s Daughter: The Extraordinary Life of Felice della Rovere. (Oxford University Press, 2005), xv, 11.
  16. Sabatini, Raphael (1912). The Life of Cesare Borgia. London: Stanley Paul & Company. p. 426.
  17. R. Ritchie, Historical Atlas of the Renaissance, p. 64.
  18. "Cesare Borgia". Encyclopedia of World Biography. Farmington Hills, MI: Encyclopedia.com/The Gale Group. 2004. Retrieved April 15, 2016.
  19. Greeley, Andrew M. (2005). The Making of the Pope 2005. New York: Little, Brown. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-316-32560-8.
  20. Ullmann, Walter (1972). "Julius and the Schismatic Cardinals". In Baker, Derek. Schism, Heresy and Religious Protest: Papers Read at the Tenth Summer Meeting and the Eleventh Winter Meeting of the Ecclesiastical History Society. Cambridge, England: Ecclesiastical History Society by Cambridge University Press. pp. 177178. ISBN 978-0-521-08486-4.
  21. Hughes, Philip (1979). "Chapter V: 'Facilis Descensus ...' 14711517: A Papacy of Princes". History of the Church: Volume 3: The Revolt Against the Church: Aquinas to Luther (revised ed.). London: Sheed & Ward. p. 415. ISBN 978-0-7220-7983-6.
  22. Adams, John P. (16 December 2012). "Sede Vacante 1503, II". Csun.edu. Retrieved 2013-10-07.
  23. 1 2 Cawthorne, Nigel (1996). Sex Lives of the Popes. Prion. p. 219. ISBN 9781853755460.
  24. 1 2 Shaw, Christine. Julius II: The Warrior Pope. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 1993. ISBN 0-631-16738-2, pages 127-132, 135-139, 228-234
  25. 1 2 John Julius Norwich A History of Venice. New York: Vintage Books, 1989. ISBN 0-679-72197-5, pages 392, 423-424
  26. Mallett, Michael and Christine Shaw. The Italian Wars, 1494–1559: War, State and Society in Early Modern Europe. Harlow, England: Pearson Education Limited, 2012. ISBN 978-0-582-05758-6, page 85
  27. Stinger, Charles M. The Renaissance in Rome (Indiana University Press, 1985).
  28. Adams, Robert M., "Introduction," The Prince Niccolo Machiavelli (Norton, 1992), 72, n3.
  29. Guicciardini, Francesco. The History of Italy. Translated by Sydney Alexander. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1984. ISBN 0-691-00800-0, pages 196-197
  30. Cavendish, Richard (2009). "Venice Excommunicated". History Today (History Today Ltd.) 59 (4). (subscription required)
  31. Charles Oman, A History of the Art of War in the Sixteenth Century. London: Methuen & Co., 1937, page 152.
  32. Baldwin, Robert (2010). "Papal Politics and Raphael's Stanza Della Segnatura as Papal Golden Age" (PDF). Social History of Art, by Robert Baldwin.
  33. Litta, "Famiglie Celebri Italiane" (Celebrated Italian Families), 1833
  34. A definitive life of Felice della Rovere is in Caroline P. Murphy's The Pope’s Daughter: The Extraordinary Life of Felice della Rovere. (Oxford University Press, 2005)
  35. 1 2 Christine Ward, Julius II: Warrior Pope
  36. G. Priuli, Diarii, in Rerum italicarum scriptores, Vol 24, Bologna, 1938.
  37. M. Sanudo, I diarii, Venice 1879–1902
  38. Ed. Jan Sperna Weil, Erasmus of Rotterdam: The Man and the Scholar, 1986
  39. Anthony Majanlahti, The families who made Rome
  40. P. De Morney, Le Mystere d'iniquite, c'est a dire, l'histoire de la papaute, 1612.
  41. 1 2 Tuchman, Barbara W. (1984). The March of Folly. Alfred A. Knopf, Inc. ISBN 9780307798565.

Further reading

External links

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Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Barthélémy Chuet
Bishop of Lausanne
1472–1473
Succeeded by
Benoît de Montferrand
Preceded by
Guglielmo Belloni
Bishop of Catania
1473–1474
Succeeded by
Francesco de Campulo
Preceded by
Alain de Coëtivy
Archbishop of Avignon
1474–1503
Succeeded by
Antoine Florès
Preceded by
Jean de Montmirail
Bishop of Carpentras
1475–1476
Succeeded by
Frédéric de Saluces
Preceded by
Benoît de Montferrand
Bishop of Coutances
1476–1477
Succeeded by
Galeazzo della Rovere
Preceded by
Hélie de Pompadour
Bishop of Viviers
1477–1479
Succeeded by
Jean de Montchenu
Preceded by
Jean de Petit
Bishop of Mende
1478–1483
Succeeded by
Clemente Grosso della Rovere
Preceded by
Berardo Eroli
Cardinal-bishop of Sabina
1479–1483
Succeeded by
Oliviero Carafa
Preceded by
Alessandro Carafa
Bishop of Coutances
1476–1478
Succeeded by
Giovanni Bernardino Carafa
Preceded by
Marco Barbo
Camerlengo of the Sacred College of Cardinals
1479
Succeeded by
Giovanni Battista Zeno
Preceded by
Giacomo Passarelli
Bishop of Bologna
1483–1502
Succeeded by
Vincenzo Carafa
Preceded by
Guillaume d'Estouteville
Cardinal-bishop of Ostia
1483–1503
Succeeded by
Oliviero Carafa
Preceded by
Jean de Corguilleray
Bishop of Lodève
1488–1489
Succeeded by
Guillaume Briçonnet
Preceded by
Pietro Gara
Bishop of Savona
1499–1502
Succeeded by
Galeotto della Rovere
Preceded by
Giovanni Stefano Ferrero
Bishop of Vercelli
1502–1503
Succeeded by
Giovanni Stefano Ferrero
Preceded by
Pius III
Pope
1 November 1503 – 21 February 1513
Succeeded by
Leo X
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